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CNN commits journalistic malpractice. Again.

Remember Richard Jewell? He was accused of placing a bomb in Atlanta’s Centennial Park during the 1996 Olympics. He endured a horrific trial (and conviction) by media and had his life destroyed. Turned out he was innocent. The guilty party was anti-abortion terrorist Eric Rudolph. Jewell sued several media outlets (including CNN), reaching settlements in all cases save one (which was dismissed after his death).

Now, let’s say that you’re surfing CNN this morning and you come across an item where they report that Richard Jewell was the Olympic Park bomber. What would you make of that? What conclusions would you draw about the credibility of an organization that reported as fact something that has long been disproven?

Well, something painfully similar is happening on CNN.com right now. The story, entitled “Ramseys’ attorney: Grand jury ‘likely confused’ about JonBenet,” centers on the revelation that the grand jury in the infamous Ramsey case wanted to indict her parents, John and Patsy.

The malpractice occurs in paragraph 24:

Investigators didn’t find footprints in the snow outside the home, there was no sign of forced entry.

The problem? Well, there are a couple. First, the “footprints in the snow” meme was fiction from the start and was addressed years ago. You could have galloped an elephant through that yard without leaving footprints in the snow because there simply wasn’t much snow.

Another, key story emerged in March 1997 when it was reported that police found it curious that there were “no footprints in the snow,” around the house. The implication was obvious, and intended: no footprints, no intruder. The slight problem with this, as law enforcement knew and the crime scene photos from December 26 make clear, was that there was little or no snow around the house.

These facts have been long established. In addition, the “no sign of forced entry” meme has been dismissed. There was, in fact, an unlocked basement window and Lou Smit, who had established himself as Colorado’s premier murder investigator, demonstrates how easily an intruder could have gotten in. Watch the video, and there’s more here.

And yet, here are CNN reporters Carma Hassan and Greg Botelho parroting long-dead fictions as though they were fact.

FOX takes a beating for its “news” coverage, and rightly so. Not only have they helped pioneer a new age of post-truth “journalism,” they’ve actually gone to court and argued that it’s okay for them to lie.

The attorneys for Fox, owned by media baron Rupert Murdoch, successfully argued the First Amendment gives broadcasters the right to lie or deliberately distort news reports on the public airwaves.

Better yet, the court agreed with them. Yay for America.

But FOX hardly invented cynical news entertainment. CNN has been in the business of “shaping” stories into ratings-generating narratives for a long time. For instance, remember Elian Gonzales? Before April 22, 2000, CNN.com had been my home page. After that I killed it and probably haven’t been back ten times since.

I checked back a few minutes later, though, and something had changed. See if you can spot what happened.

What do you see? What do you think was the point?

For the vision-impaired, picture one depicts the agent pointing a nasty looking automatic weapon at the man holding Elian Gonzales. Which is a pretty good photo. But it isn’t as thrilling as a picture of a federal agent pointing a nasty looking automatic weapon at six year-old Elian Gonzales, is it?

This was a deliberate editorial decision that served no legitimate journalistic purpose. However, it served the purposes of entertainment and marketing quite enthusiastically.

If it hadn’t been clear before, that was the day the facade came down and CNN revealed that they were not a news organization, they were a news-like entertainment product organization. Newz-Whiz®, if you will. It was the day that anyone who cared about being told the truth walked away and never came back.

So today’s little one-sentence transgression against journalistic competence and ethics is hardly anything new or surprising, although it is a reminder of how shoddy the standards are at the place that invented the 24/7 news entertainment cycle.

I would say America deserves better, but how can I until we start demanding better?

2 comments on “CNN commits journalistic malpractice. Again.”

Coincidentally, I was at the gym last night and therefore a captive audience to fox news’ O’Reilly show. In it, O’Reilly lambasted 60 Minutes interview of President Obama and Sec. of State Hillary Clinton. O’Reilly stated that “if only the mainstream news had asked a couple of questions, we would know so much more about Benghazi”, or something very close to that. He naturally listed the two pointed, loaded questions that would have shed so much light on this event, had only the mainstream press been interested in finding out the truth.

Well, the truth was that 60 Minutes did in fact address the point O’Reilly made. The journalist who did the interview stated up front that they were only given 30 minutes. He stated up front that one of the topics he was not able to ask was about Benghazi. And given how Sec. of State Clinton had already testified UNDER OATH before BOTH chambers of Congress just prior to this interview, it is little wonder why it was left out.

Naturally though, Mr. O’Reilly left that part of the 60 Minutes show out of his clips. Apparently, it would have conflicted with his assertion that the mainstream media is only interested in protecting and coddling the Obama administration. Of course, if one is stupid enough to not realize that Mr. O’Reilly is part and parcel of the mainstream media, I suppose one is stupid enough to believe everything else he said.

I do find it funny though that so many of the people who watch fox news and its ilk liken the president to a Communist. I wonder if any of them recognize that the Soviet Union did manage to export one thing after its collapse – Pravda.

*sigh* … Sadly, I agree. A faux pax (and that’s generous) like this is akin to a tornado ripping off the roof. But what I see day after day is indicative of rot in the foundation: the misspellings in text on screen, the continued “here’s what we know so far” or “we’ll tell you more about this video we’re showing when we know more.” CNN stumble through the day, methinks, waiting for the next tsunami.